John Gould

John A. Gould "is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Colorado College. He is a graduate of Williams College with a major in Political Science and a minor in Studio Art. He did graduate work at the Fletcher School (Tufts University) and Columbia University, where he earned his Ph. D. in February, 2001. He speaks French and some Slovak.

"Gould taught high school history at the Chapin School in New York from 1984 to 1986 and at the American School of Paris from 1989 to 1991. As a graduate student he taught politics at Palacky University (Czech Republic), Comenius University (Slovakia), Tufts University, and The Fletcher School. He has held a number of fellowships including a Robert Schuman Fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy and a post-doctoral fellowship at the Graduate School of International Studies, Denver University. John took a tenure track position at Colorado College in 2002 where he held a John D. and Catherine T. Mac Arthur Fellowship from 2003-5.

"Colorado College students selected Gould as Lloyd E. Worner Professor of the Year in 2008. He also won the Ray O. Werner award for Exemplary Teaching in the Liberal Arts in 2009.

"Gould maintains an active research program in the field of comparative and international political economy with a particular focus on the relationship of postcommunist economic policies with political institutions. He specializes in Slovak and Czech politics, but his recent work includes case studies from Kosovo, Serbia, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Chad. He has (co)published refereed journal articles in Comparative European Politics, Europe-Asia Studies, Business and Politics, and Review of International Political Economy. Gould also co-writes briefs on Central European politics for Oxford Analytica with his wife, Simona Gould.

"In 2009, Gould and his co-authors won the Slovak Studies Association's Best Article Award for "Slovakia's Neoliberal Turn."

"Gould is pleased to serve on the board of academic advisors at the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict. He belongs to the American Association for Advancement of Slavic Studies, The Slovak Studies Association, the American Political Science Association and the International Studies Association. He lives in Manitou Springs, CO with his wife and two sons."


 * Staff, Center for Applied Non-Violent Actions and Strategies

Refereed Journal Articles:

 * “Making Market Democracies? The Contingent Loyalties of Post-Privatization Elites in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Serbia,” with Carl Sickner. Review of International Political Economy 15:4. Fall 2008.
 * “Market Democracy Unleashed? Business Elites and the Crisis of Competitive Authoritarianism in Ukraine,” with Yaroslav Hetman, Business and Politics. 10:2 August 2008: 1-33.
 * “Slovakia’s Neoliberal Turn,” with Sharon Fisher & Tim Haughton. Europe-Asia Studies 59:3 September 2007: 977-998.
 * “An Obsolescing Bargain in Chad: Explaining Shifts in Leverage between the Government and the World Bank,” with Matthew Winters. Business and Politics 9:2 August 2007: 1-34.